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By: citybiz
October 31, 2025

Curated TLDR

Should You Still Blog When AI Answers Everything

Blogging still matters. Not because I run a PR firm, but because AI and Google only surface what already exists. If your expertise is not on the page (AKA online), it will not be in the results. A steady, useful blog does four jobs at once. It earns search visibility, feeds AI overviews with clean facts, arms sales with links that answer real questions and gives reporters quotable lines they can trust. Blogging is not a journal. It is a library of answers your customer needs.

A story from the field

A week or so ago, I met with a client who asked, “Does blogging still matter now that people get their news from AI?” Current estimates from Tom’s Guide show about 30 percent of people get news from AI tools. The rest still start on Google, Yahoo or Bing. But that is not the point. AI has to pull from somewhere. Search engines have to rank something. If your knowledge is not published, both will skip you. Yes, blogging still matters. However, blogging for its own sake will not work.

On a client Zoom last week, someone asked, “What is the deadline for Entrepreneur of the Year?” I opened Google. I am Gen X. Our client opened ChatGPT. They are Gen Z. We landed on the same answer. Their tool surfaced it on the page. Mine took one click into the official site. Two paths, same result. The point is not the speed. It is the reality that your content must serve both the click and the citation.

Plan for both AI and search

AI tools are gaining ground for quick answers. Classic search still drives most discovery, shopping and multi-source research. Treat this as a both/and. Write posts that answer the core question in the first screen. Expand with steps, tables and FAQs that AI can cite cleanly. Keep facts current, name people and products precisely and link to related guides, pricing and case studies. Add Article schema. Use FAQ or How-to schema when it fits. This is how you rank in search and show up in AI summaries without losing your voice.

What PR adds to SEO and LLMs

SEO makes your site easy to find and trust. PR makes you worth finding and trusting. Earned media creates credible backlinks. Consistent names for leaders, products and locations build entity authority. Bylines and data give models something reliable to quote. If you want large language models to surface your point of view, publish clear definitions, timelines, data tables and short answers up top. Put a real person’s name on the page with a short bio. Link your sources. Keep it fresh.

Signals that move rankings and citations

Think of each post as a product. Label it, package it and make the value obvious from the start.

  • Freshness: clear dates, updated stats, current examples
  • Structure: scannable headers, short paragraphs, pull quotes, one table or checklist
  • Authority: named author with credentials, linked sources and first-party data
  • Entities: precise names for people, products and places
  • Schema: Article plus FAQ or How-to when appropriate
  • Answers fast: state the core answer in the first 150 words
  • Internal links: connect to related guides, pricing and case studies
  • Experience: fast load, mobile-friendly, clean page design

Ship posts that check these boxes and you make it easier for readers to use your content and easier for systems to surface it.

Write to user intent, not topics

User intent keywords show purpose: learn, compare, buy or navigate. Start with the words your customers use on sales calls, in support tickets and on social. Group by intent.

  • Informational: what is, how to, pros and cons, cost
  • Comparative: vs, best for, alternative to
  • Transactional: pricing, demo, near me, book
  • Navigational: brand terms like login, case studies
  • Local: service plus city, neighborhoods, landmarks

Match format to intent. Explainers and checklists for informational. X vs Y tables for comparative. Pricing and timelines for transactional. City pages with local proof for local. Build titles and H2s with intent modifiers, like “Media training checklist for first TV interview” or “Franchise PR pricing guide.” Add a summary at the top and three to five FAQs that mirror People Also Ask language. Answer the next question before the reader has to ask it.

Cadence you can keep

Consistency beats sprints. Pick a tier and protect it.

  • Minimum viable: two posts per month per service line
  • Healthy growth: one post per week
  • Aggressive: two to three per week during launches

Use a simple monthly mix: three evergreen explainers, two timely points of view tied to coverage, one conversion piece such as a case study or comparison. Lock a publishing day and keep a two-month runway. Refresh one older post each month with new data and a short update note.

Content that teaches, compares and converts

Mix formats with a clear job for each.

  • Evergreen explainers with a TLDR table and FAQs
  • Decision guides and comparisons with scorecards
  • Pricing and timelines with sample schedules
  • Case studies that lead with outcomes and show the playbook
  • Question hubs marked up with FAQ schema
  • Playbooks and checklists that are printable and linkable
  • Newsjacks with one chart and two quotes
  • Local pages that blend service details with city proof
  • Short how-to videos with captions and a transcript

Every post needs a summary up top, one table or checklist, sources and dates, internal links and a next step that matches intent.

Use AI to speed work, not replace judgment

AI is a great assistant for outlines, FAQ ideas, title sets, meta drafts and schema starters. It can suggest internal links, alt text and repurposing angles. Keep humans on facts, tone and examples.

Guardrails that matter:

  • Fact check every stat and date
  • Cite sources by name and link
  • Keep your voice and edit for clarity
  • Add first-party data and quotes
  • Label images with plain alt text

A helpful prompt: “Give me an H2/H3 outline for [topic] for [audience]. Include a TLDR table, five FAQs and one short case example.”

Why blogs actually fail

Not because the channel is broken, but because the work is unstructured and sporadic. Common misses include unclear audience, topics chosen by guesswork, walls of text with no summaries or tables, not using enough words, weak internal links, missing schema and no refresh cycle. Fix it by defining audience, intent and outcome before drafting. Add a TLDR, one table and three to five FAQs to every post. Repurpose each article into two channels within a week. Track entrances, citations, links and assisted conversions.

Proof from our own shop

A few years ago, at TrizCom PR, we made an intentional shift to more owned content, including long-form blogs. Today, more than 60 percent of our organic website traffic comes from keyword-optimized posts. The other 40 percent arrives through AI search that cites or summarizes those same posts. Why it works is simple. We write to user intent, show the answer first, use Article plus FAQ schema, connect posts to services and pricing, and refresh older pieces with new data. Then we repurpose winners into email, short video and bylines, all linking back to the pillar page. The result is steady nonbrand traffic, better qualified leads and a library that both AI and search engines can trust.

So, what does this mean?

If AI answers everything, your job is to give it something accurate to cite and give people something useful to read. Keep the cadence. Write to intent. Package value in the first scroll. When your library grows, search lifts, sales get better links and reporters find clean quotes.

If you want a blog that feeds SEO, AI search, sales and PR, my team can run the full system or coach yours. Start with a 90-day pilot that proves it. Everyone has a story. Let TrizCom PR tell yours.

About the Author

Jo Trizila is the founder and CEO of TrizCom PR, a leading Dallas-based public relations firm known for delivering strategic communications that drive business growth and enhance brand reputations as well as Pitch PR, a press release distribution agency. With over 25 years of experience in PR and marketing, Jo has helped countless organizations navigate complex communication challenges, ranging from crisis management to brand storytelling. Under her leadership, TrizCom PR has earned recognition for its results-driven approach, combining traditional and integrated digital strategies to deliver impactful, measurable outcomes for clients across various industries, including healthcare, technology and nonprofit sectors. Jo is passionate about helping businesses amplify their voices and connect with audiences meaningfully. Her hands-on approach and commitment to excellence have established TrizCom PR as a trusted partner for companies seeking to elevate their brand and achieve lasting success. Contact Jo at jo@TrizCom.com.

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citybiz is a publisher of news and information about business, money, and people - including interviews, questions and answers with thought leaders. citybiz reaches business owners, C-level, senior managers and directors in 20 major U.S. city markets.